Scott Gaille
Scott Gaille | |
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Shelby Scott Gaille (born 1969) is an American lawyer, petroleum executive, and academic. He is on the faculties of Rice University’s Graduate School of Business[1] and the University of Chicago Law School.[2] Gaille is the author of seven books[3] and an influential figure on the topic of energy law. Having traveled to more than 100 countries, Gaille has built business relationships with a culturally diverse range of partners from around the globe.
Early life and education
Born in
Legal and energy sector career
Following law school, Gaille accepted a
In October 2001, Gaille joined Occidental Petroleum Corporation’s Dubai, United Arab Emirates office, where he managed a range of legal and business development matters for the corporation’s eastern hemisphere subsidiaries in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Libya, Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates. He received the President’s Award from the corporation for his innovative structuring of the Oman Gas Project. In 2004, Gaille became Director – Business Development for Occidental Oil & Gas Corporation, where his principal responsibilities were acquiring exploration concessions in Africa and South America and managing the companies’ relationships with oil ministries in those regions.
In August 2007, Gaille departed Oxy with private equity backing to found the Gaille Group (www.gaillegroup.com), which has launched and incubated a series of businesses in the energy and financial services sectors. The Gaille Group's ventures have included the founding of Sequent Asset Management, LLC ($400 million in assets raised from 2008-2010) and the acquisition of petroleum concession rights in several African nations. Gaille has frequently served as an executive and/or a member of the board of directors of both public and private companies, including as Managing Director & General Counsel of Sequent Asset Management and as the Chief Compliance Officer, General Counsel, and Corporate Secretary of a NASDAQ-listed energy company (ZaZa Energy Corporation).
His legal practice (GAILLE PLLC - www.gaillelaw.com) focuses on outside general counsel representation for entrepreneurs and global energy law.
Academic career
In 2007, Gaille joined the faculty of Rice University's Graduate School of Business, where he has focused on delivering practical energy expertise to business students. The course developed by Gaille, International Energy Development, provides students with a framework for acquiring, managing and divesting international energy projects. In 2012, Gaille published the textbook International Energy Development, which is based on his teachings at Rice.
In 2013, the University of Chicago Law School appointed Gaille a lecturer in Law. Gaille teaches the Energy Law Seminar, which exposes law students to current issues facing energy law practitioners. He also has served on the Law School's Visiting Committee.
Outside of his academic appointments, Gaille regularly speaks on a variety of energy topics. Among other venues, Gaille has lectured on energy issues at the University of Texas at Austin's Energy Symposium, the University of Chicago Booth School of Business’ Emerging Markets Summit, Marathon Oil Corporation’s executive training program, Chevron's San Ramon management training program, the Namibian Oil & Gas Conference, the Association of International Petroleum Negotiators, and the Asia Shale Conference.
Bibliography
Selected books
• 2001 The Law Review,
• 2010 The Unmerciful Lawyer (Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award, Quarterfinalist),
• 2011 International Energy Development,
• 2013 The Camel Spider,
• 2014 Shale Energy Development,
• 2017 Construction Energy Development,
• 2019 Strange Tales of World Travel (Best Travel Book of 2019, Finalist – Forward Magazine Indies; Best Travel Essay, Bronze Medalist – Independent Publisher Book Awards; Best Travel Book 2019, Honorable Mention – National Association of Travel Journalists),
Selected articles
• Publishing by U.S. Court of Appeals Judges: Before and After the Bork Hearings, 26
• The Use of Quantity Terms to Improve Efficiency and Stability in International Gas Sales & Purchase Agreements (Energy Law Journal 2008)[12]
• The Allocation of International Petroleum Licenses to National Oil Companies: Insights from the Coase Theorem (Energy Law Journal 2010)[13]
• Mitigating the Resource Curse: A Proposal for a Microfinance and Educational Lending Royalty (Energy Law Journal 2011)[14]
• The ABA Task Force Report on the Future of Legal Education: The Role of Adjunct Professors and Practical Teaching in the Energy Sector (Energy Law Journal 2014)[15]
• How Can Governments Accelerate International Shale Development? (Energy Law Journal 2015)[16]
• How Political Risk Associated with Climate Change is Impacting Pipeline Construction Agreements (Energy Law Journal 2019)[17]
• Reducing Conflict and Risk: Why Parties Benefit from Using Enumerated Adjustment Clauses in Energy Construction and Services Agreements (Energy Law Journal 2021)[18]
• Control, Fault, and Knock-For-Knock: A Guide to Selecting Indemnities in Energy Construction and Services Agreements (Energy Law Journal 2023)[19]
References
- ^ "Scott Gaille". Rice University. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
- ^ "Scott Gaille". The University of Chicago Law School. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
- ^ "S. Scott Gaille". Amazon. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
- ISBN 978-0887393778.
- ISBN 978-1456356859.
- ISBN 978-1466439474.
- ISBN 978-1480278523.
- ISBN 978-1499220605.
- ISBN 978-1546336716.
- ISBN 978-1609521691.
- S2CID 155035963.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott (2008). "The Use of Quantity Terms to Improve Efficiency and Stability in International Gas Sales & Purchase Agreements" (PDF). Energy Law Journal. 29 (2): 645–666. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott (2010). "Allocation of International Petroleum Licenses to National Oil Companies: Insights from the Coase Theorem" (PDF). Energy Law Journal. 31 (1): 111–124. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott (2011). "Mitigating the Resource Curse: A Proposal for a Microfinance and Educational Lending Royalty Law". Energy Law Journal. 32 (1): 81–98. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott (2014). "The ABA Task Force Report on the Future of Legal Education: The Role of Adjunct Professors and Practical Teaching in the Energy Sector" (PDF). Energy Law Journal. 35 (21): 199–213. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott (2015). "How Can Governments Accelerate International Shale Development?" (PDF). Energy Law Journal. 36 (95): 95–112. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott (2019). "How Political Risk Associated with Climate Change is Impacting Pipeline Construction Agreements" (PDF). Energy Law Journal. 40 (1): 111–128. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott (2021). "Reducing Conflict and Risk: Why Parties Benefit from Using Enumerated Adjustment Clauses in Energy Construction and Services Agreements" (PDF). Energy Law Journal. 42 (1): 123–148. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
- ^ Gaille, S. Scott; Harris, Tanner (2023). "Control, Fault, and Knock-For-Knock: A Guide to Selecting Indemnities in Energy Construction and Services Agreements" (PDF). Energy Law Journal. 44 (1): 101–118 – via Energy Bar Association.
External links
- Chicago Journals
- ForeWord Review (Four Stars for The Unmerciful Lawyer)
- ForeWord Review (The Law Review)
- AIPN Chapter Presentation
- "Scott Gaille, '95, Guest Lectures in Oil and Gas Law Class" (March 20, 2013)
- University of Texas at Austin
- Shelby Gaille Forbes Profile
- Namibian Oil & Gas Conference
- Houston Business Journal
- The Gaille Group
- Law Insider
- Africa Business Symposium
- ZaZa Energy Corporation
- Board Vote
- Social Science Research Network
- Ryan C. Black and Ryan J. Owens, Elevation Adaptation: How Circuit Judges Alter Their Behavior for Promotion to the Supreme Court (“Gaille (1997) analyzed the amount of articles circuit court judges published before and after the Bork hearings, finding that circuit court judges authored significantly fewer articles after the Bork debacle than they did before it. What is more, judges authored significantly fewer articles mentioning “race” or “abortion” in the aftermath of the Bork hearing. Simply put, circuit court judges who harbored ambitions for elevation to the Supreme Court made the strategic calculation to publish fewer articles, articles that might later be used against them.)
- Richard Posner, How Judges Think
- Lee Epstein, William M. Landes and Richard Posner, The Behavior of Federal Judges
- Ahmed E. Taha, Information and the Selection of Judges: A Comment on "A Tournament of Judges"
- University of Chicago Course Catalog